And they made it happen. Late Atal Bihari Vajpayee and veteran L K Advani deserve all credit for floating the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) on April 6th, 1980.
The 13 April 1980 editorial of the RSS-run 'Organiser' said: "Although many would like to give the old Jana Sangh name to the new party, it was but appropriate that the new party should get a new name . . . there are significant new elements which can only broaden its base."
first rally Ram Lilla Maidan, Delhi - 1980 |
It is said 'one man' Vajpayee found hard to expunge was Nanaji Deshmukh. The co-founder of the Jana Sangh was older than Vajpayee, and perhaps the only man remaining in the party (old Jan Sangh) who could call him ‘Atal’ without the honorific ‘ji’ at the end.
But Nanaji was by now disillusioned with the way the Janata Party had put ambition before principle. Equally, he resented how methodically Vajpayee had demoted him.
Nanaji could have made a public scene, as was standard in other parties. Instead, he announced his retirement from politics, claiming that he had turned sixty and wanted to set an example. Nanaji decided to move to Chitrakoot, a forested area in central India, and work with tribals.
Many years later in January 2019, Nanaji was awarded Bharat Ratna - the highest civilian award by the Modi government.
Originally called Chandikadas Amritrao Deshmukh was deputed to Uttar Pradesh to function as a RSS Pracharak. It may be mentioned here that during 2002 Gujarat riots, Late Deshmukh had visited the western state and had disapproved the violence in the state.
"Gujarat has been caught in a heart rendering genocide orchestrated as a reaction to the ghastly carnage staged at Godhra. Do we want to divide our country once again on a Hindu-Muslim basis?," Nanaji had said on April 9, 2002 during his visit to Ahmedabad, as recalled in blogger's book 'Godhra - Journey of a Prime Minister'.
It is also worth mentioning here that BJP stalwart L K Advani in his autobiography, 'My Country My Life', had written --- “If the birth of the Janata government was a lesson in defending democracy, its demise was a harsh reminder about the propensity of power-hungry leaders to undo the gains of a popular democratic movement.”
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Atal ji and Nawaz Sharif - 1999 |
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Emergency imposed by Indira Gandhi had threatened democracy.
Before the end of the Emergency (June 25, 1975 to March 21, 1977), major events would take place.
Just before the sixth Lok Sabha polls in March 1977, in a successful move in Indian politics, the Opposition presented a united front against the Congress.
Of the seven national parties then, four — Congress (O), Bhartiya Jana Sangh (BJS), Socialist Party and Bharatiya Lok Dal (BLD) — informally merged into one party, along with a few groups like Congress For Democracy (CFD), which was named the Janata Party.
It is true one of the problems was the erstwhile Jan Sangh leaders in the Janata Party taking part in RSS activities. In a seeming reference to Atal Bihari Vajpayee and Advani, among others, socialist stalwart Madhu Limaye objected to this soon after the party’s formation. This was labeled as 'dual membership'.
The Janata parliamentary board on March 19, 1980, decided by a majority vote that none of its functionaries could take part in the day-to-day activities of the RSS.
This complicated the situation for the Janata Party’s BJS camp since its history made it virtually impossible to dissociate from the RSS.
After Indira Gandhi returned to power the 'exit' of Advani and Vajpayee from the Janata Party looked imminent. The BJP was floated on April 6, 1980.
Vajpayee became the founding president and L K Advani the general secretary.
Gauging by the politics of that era, bot the veterans worked on a political ideology even giving it the phrase of commitment to Gandhian socialism.
Both Vajpayee and Advani worked on a right synthesis for commitment to Hindu nationalism and the discipline of RSS values. But they had to embrace the 'policies and politics of Jayaprakash Narayan'.
Vajpayee knew this could also come handy to keep the RSS at some length when the real polity and running of the organisation came.
By then, both also believed that they had become 'expert' at working together to balance parliament, BJP interest, pro-Hindutva movement and voters.
Advani was the Loh Purush - iron-willed leader -- and Atal Bihari Vajpayee was the Vikas Purush (development man) and also a more 'acceptable' face for future political maneuvering.
The Vajpayee-Advani chemistry was very effective. In Hindi journalism that came to be known as 'Jugal Bandi'.
Many years later on May 23rd, 2019 after the BJP won an enormous mandate in the general elections, Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Amit Shah walked in step with each other raising hands and making victory sign when they visited the new BJP headquarters in Delhi to a shower of flowers.
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